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Author: Subject: Bands, albums or songs that changed everything
clevohardcore
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[*] posted on 12-26-2010 at 08:04 PM
Bands, albums or songs that changed everything


Ministry- the land of rape and honey, specifically the song stigmata.


Murphys Law- s/t made hardcore smile.


Minor Threat- I was 5 and not rocking tunes yet, but I understand its magnitude.









Each aspect of the soul has it's own part to play, but the ideal is harmonious agreement with reason and control.
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[*] posted on 12-26-2010 at 08:05 PM


Bad Brains - Pay to Cum



Quote:
Originally posted by REV.PAULIE
HONUS-as much as i can't stand a great deal of what you really like (for my own reasons that i would never hold,nor impose,against you),YOU FUCKING RULE!

YOU,HONUS,IS WHAT MAKES THE "EDGE" COOL.

YOUR FRIEND,
PAULIE


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[*] posted on 12-26-2010 at 08:49 PM


For me it was Ramallah- Kill a Celebrity. I was blown away when I first heard that album and I discovered just how pissed off music could be.



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[*] posted on 12-26-2010 at 09:05 PM


I'm not crazy, Institution
you're the one who's crazy...

oh to be 12 again




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[*] posted on 12-26-2010 at 09:09 PM


Sex Pistols period.
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 01:41 AM


Hatebreed : Satisfaction Is The Death Of Desire.

That albums started off a whole new era of hardcore, some good, a lot bad, but none the less a very important album in hardcore.

BKT.




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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 02:07 AM


Snapcase - Progression Through Unlearning. Best thing to come out of the 90's.



A lot of people ask me what kind of music I like. I love "soul music". My "soul music" isn’t a style, genre or niche. It’s music that is genuine. It’s a painful lyric, a dirty bassline, it’s a harrowing vocal, it’s feedback, it’s an anthem, it’s a love song, it’s anarchy. I’ve got my personal favourites but in the end it doesn’t matter who or where it comes from... so long as it’s good and it's real.
- Paul Morris, music director at 97.7 HTZ-FM
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clevohardcore
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 02:26 AM


This thread wasn't meant to be about you or me. It is more of a things that changed things kind of thread. You could even put shit you hate in it.



Each aspect of the soul has it's own part to play, but the ideal is harmonious agreement with reason and control.
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 05:44 AM


I stand by my pick :D Lou Koller does too, it was in his top albums on some site. That album set the bar much like the Hatebeed album BKT picked. That to me is the pinnacle of Victory Records releases and the benchmark for the next decade of bands that tried to get on the same playing field.



A lot of people ask me what kind of music I like. I love "soul music". My "soul music" isn’t a style, genre or niche. It’s music that is genuine. It’s a painful lyric, a dirty bassline, it’s a harrowing vocal, it’s feedback, it’s an anthem, it’s a love song, it’s anarchy. I’ve got my personal favourites but in the end it doesn’t matter who or where it comes from... so long as it’s good and it's real.
- Paul Morris, music director at 97.7 HTZ-FM
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 08:10 AM


The whole 90's? Snapcase? That album was more of a bookend for a decade of over indulgent, self important hc. It didn't come out till like 97 too. It's a benchmark album for it's time, but its influence was more in perfecting it's past than driving the future. I can't think of any bands that came after that were clearly "snapcase influenced".
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 08:12 AM


and if we're going to go with bands that changed things for the worse...American Nightmare. terrible band turned hardcore into a vidal sassoon commercial.
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 08:49 AM


i like a.n. they were a good live band.very energetic shows.

the two records theat influenced me a lot were another wasted night by gang green and the first suicidal lp.
i heard them the first time when i was 13 or 14 and all other music became uninteresting.
after them came the first rorschach lp. unbelievable band.




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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 09:26 AM


Fugazi. Great band but they started emo.



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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 12:42 PM


Refused...
a lot of kids got super experimental after them...




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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 12:59 PM


In their respective genres, these bands all changed the face of music.

Black Flag
Negative Approach
Bad Brains
Sex Pistols
DOA
Dead Kennedy's
Skinny Puppy
Throbbing Gristle
Ministry
Metallica
Motorhead
Chuck Berry
Jerry Lee Lewis
Run DMC
Stooges
MC5
New York Dolls




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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 08:44 PM


Quote:
Originally posted by Lou Koller
The early and mid-nineties is when hardcore once again went through a change. Younger bands were not only taking from their roots in the punk/hardcore scene, but branching out into other musical influences. And no one did it better than Snapcase. They were ahead of the pack – you could tell from their early recordings, like Looking Glass Self and the Steps EP, that they were onto something different. It was when Progression Through Unlearning came out, though, that these new influences really showed – and Snapcase set the bar high! The mid-tempo crushing sound they’d had in the past was perfected here, and the Helmet-like rhythms and time changes they mixed-in fit perfectly. Many people point at The Refused’s seminal album The Shape of Punk to Come as the new innovation in hardcore, but they seem to forget: The Refused always followed what Snapcase did first. And yes, Progression came out a year before Shape of Punk did. Snapcase’s influence is far and wide, from the new generation of hardcore bands to some of the big boys like the Deftones. A must-have album.

Later,

Lou


http://www.metalsucks.net/2010/05/20/lou-koller-from-sick-of...




A lot of people ask me what kind of music I like. I love "soul music". My "soul music" isn’t a style, genre or niche. It’s music that is genuine. It’s a painful lyric, a dirty bassline, it’s a harrowing vocal, it’s feedback, it’s an anthem, it’s a love song, it’s anarchy. I’ve got my personal favourites but in the end it doesn’t matter who or where it comes from... so long as it’s good and it's real.
- Paul Morris, music director at 97.7 HTZ-FM
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 10:22 PM


Misfits - Collection 1
Sick of It All - Scratch The Surface

These 2 albums got me into punk/hardcore. Oddly enough, for the longest time I thought of SOIA as no bullshit punk rock since my first exposure to hardcore was the mid-90's metallic hardcore I never really cared for.

Earth Crisis

It took me a long time to figure out why I got dirty looks when I was smoking a cigarette outside the one club that ran hardcore/punk/metal shows. Then I figured out a lot of the kids giving me those looks were wannabe militants.
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[*] posted on 12-27-2010 at 11:46 PM


Earth Crisis changed the face of straight edge hardcore for sure.


Bjork-Debut changed alot of shit.


Smashing Pumpkins- siamese dreams shook things up.


Metallica- black record did alot





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[*] posted on 12-28-2010 at 12:44 AM


I forgot Nirvana. I don't like them but it seemed like they changed radio programming in the early 90's (holy shit that was almost 20 years ago).
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[*] posted on 12-28-2010 at 12:56 AM


Ya, that was a long time ago. Fuck.





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[*] posted on 12-28-2010 at 02:15 PM


for the better: Black Flag, & their part in developing the touring networks & DIY record labels

for the worse: with the mention of great bands like Nirvana & Smashing Pumpkins above, & the creativity of the early-mid 90's "alternative rock" bands on the radio & MTV, the downfall of popular rock music on the radio/TV right afterwards was pretty sad. All of a sudden out of nowhere, these bands were being replaced with two choices: either boring, whiny, depressing, pussy shit known as "modern rock" like Matchbox 20, 3rd Eye Blind, Creed (& anyone else who wanted to rip off Eddie Vedder's obnoxious voice), etc., or for the more "extreme" demographic of kids, there was the abominations known as "rap-rock" & "nu-metal" & the like, worthless garbage like Limp Bizkit, Korn, Disturbed, Linkin Park, etc, etc, etc. This was around '96-'97, it was pretty sad, but it also how I started getting into hardcore/punk/oi due to my discontent with everything on the radio, so I guess some good came of it.




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[*] posted on 12-28-2010 at 09:04 PM


Venom. As far as metal and the whole extreme metal deal went, these guys started off one hell of a movement.





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[*] posted on 12-29-2010 at 09:01 AM


If you want to talk about 90's rock and bands that changed everything you gotta include Alice In Chains. The voice & the style influenced many #1 bands later in the 90's and 00's from Pearl Jam, Creed, Nickelback and countless others.



A lot of people ask me what kind of music I like. I love "soul music". My "soul music" isn’t a style, genre or niche. It’s music that is genuine. It’s a painful lyric, a dirty bassline, it’s a harrowing vocal, it’s feedback, it’s an anthem, it’s a love song, it’s anarchy. I’ve got my personal favourites but in the end it doesn’t matter who or where it comes from... so long as it’s good and it's real.
- Paul Morris, music director at 97.7 HTZ-FM
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[*] posted on 12-29-2010 at 10:23 AM


for me, my musical journey......
seeing Ramones Rock & Roll High School video on MTV as a kid kinda got me into music.
Ozzy's Blizzard of Ozz got me into Metal
Metallica's Ride the Lightning and Slayer's Hell Awaits got me into faster stuff.
Death's Scream Bloody Gore and Venom's Welcome To Hell got me into even heavier stuff
Hearing Black Flag's Wasted Again tape in middle school turned me onto punk rock.
DRI's 4 of A kind and AF's Victim in Pain got me interested in hardcore which was quickly followed by SOIA's Blood Sweat and TEars.
Napalm Death's Harmony Corruption and the Grindcrusher comp came out in 1990 when I was in the 10th grade and changed the game completely, bringing with it a whole laundry list of killer bands on Earache records like Bolt Thrower, Godflesh, Terrorizer, and so on.
I heard Sheer Terror's JCHE soon after when I was 17 which set the benchmark for what I considered to be "hard core".
Later I would come to appreciate other stuff not really within the genre from having cool friends who were into cool stuff like reggae, ska, blues etc...
after these I can't think of much
it took 2 coffees to muster this much up....
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[*] posted on 12-29-2010 at 12:22 PM


let's see, you may not like all these bands but:

The Specials - S/T
The Pogues - Red Roses For me
Bad Brians - ROIR
Mighty Mighty Bosstones - Devil's night Out
Operation Ivy - Hectic ep
Sonic Youth - EVOL/Sister
Dinosaur Jr. - You're living All Over me
Bad Religion - Suffer
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